In early 20th-century Illinois, a man named John Ashley is convicted of murder and escapes, leaving his family behind. A multigenerational saga about two American families and the question of what it means to be a good person.
A novel in documents — letters, journals, and dispatches — reconstructing the final months of Julius Caesar's life, from his point of view and those of everyone around him.
Sonia, a British woman, travels to Granada to learn flamenco after her relationship ends. Staying with family friends, she discovers letters and photographs that reveal the story of the Ramirez family during the Spanish Civil War — a story of love, betrayal, and the violence that divided Spain. Alternating between the present day and the 1930s, The Return is Hislop's portrait of Granada and the civil war's lasting trauma.
Famagusta, Cyprus, 1972. The Sunrise hotel is the most glamorous in the eastern Mediterranean, and the Georgious and Özkan families are its heart — one Greek Cypriot, one Turkish Cypriot, bound by friendship across the island's division. Then 1974 arrives: the Turkish invasion, the occupation of northern Cyprus, and the abandonment of Famagusta — a ghost city still frozen in that summer. Hislop's most politically charged novel.
A fictional British rock band in 1967 London — Utopia Avenue — rises from Soho to the Royal Albert Hall and across America, with chapter-length songs as the structural unit and the actual music scene of 1967 as the setting.
The sequel to The Island, set fifty years after the events of the original novel. The island of Spinalonga has been empty since the leper colony was closed; the families of Plaka on the Cretan shore have rebuilt their lives. But one August night, a violent act resurfaces history and forces the characters — and their descendants — to confront what was never fully resolved. A companion piece to Hislop's most famous novel.
The conclusion of the All Souls trilogy — Diana and Matthew return to the present, the mysteries of Ashmole 782 are resolved, and the conflict between creatures and the Congregation reaches its conclusion.
A vast Edwardian panorama following several interconnected families from the Arts and Crafts movement of the 1890s through the catastrophe of the First World War, centred on Olive Wellwood, a writer of fairy tales for children who uses her stories to contain what she cannot say to her family directly.
In 18th-century Barcelona, an illegitimate child named Miquel Puig becomes a master painter of religious art — navigating the guilds, the Church, and his own turbulent loves in a city of contradictions.
Two stories separated by fifty years interweave in a Suffolk village: a contemporary woman researching an architect's life, and the architect's story itself — a portrait of a German-Jewish émigré and the house he built on the English coast.
Set on a small Greek island before the birth of Christ, the novel follows a courtesan named Chrysis whose philosophical wisdom shapes all those around her, and a young man who loves her.